Objectivity in a Sentence

Examples of objectivity in a sentence

Objectivity is a pretty challenging word, but we're here to help you better understand it...with EXAMPLES!

When learning new words, it's important to see how they're used, or to see them in the different contexts in which they're often used, and that's just what we'll do to help you better understand objectivity (and many other English words!). By seeing different ways you can use objectivity in a sentence, as well as synonyms and antonyms of objectivity, you will have a much better grasp on how it should be used, and you'll feel more confortable with using it much sooner.

Below you will find the definition of objectivity, followed by 43 sample sentences (from real sources), gradually increasing in length.

objectivity(ŏbˌjĕk-tĭvˈĭ-tē)

(noun) - judgment based on observable phenomena and uninfluenced by emotions or personal prejudices

Leading from the latter statement is the idea of objectivity, an ideal that truly cannot be achieved as the very choice of 'facts' will determine the outcome of the argument. (source)

The fact that 14 of the 16 nominations on the original list were people with strong links with the ANC reflected adversely on the "so-called objectivity" of the selection panel. (source)

I recall growing up in the home of a newsman, and his stalwart take on "objectivity" -- maintaining it, upholding that all should be reported in the paper from an objective stance. (source)

Journalists will always say that they seek "balance" to maintain "objectivity," but in reality "balance" is a poor substitute for careful investigation and presentation of the facts. (source)

Granted, objectivity is difficult for all people, but are you being as objective as you can or do you have a presupposition that God does not exist or that the miraculous cannot occur? (source)

And if this is so, we must at least attempt to inject a certain objectivity to our perception of the Soviet threat, instead of assuming simplistic motives based on a threatening ideology. (source)

I mean, will you bring the same point of view, the same prisms, the same -- let us use the word objectivity -- in microscopic examination of the next fellow coming into the White House, Ann? (source)

By Robert W. McChesney and John Nichols It comes as a surprise to many to learn that the notion of objectivity or simply professional journalism is a relatively recent development in the United States. (source)

In the same way we all laugh at Fox News's claim to being "fair and balanced," we all know that there simply is no such thing as real "objectivity" - even in the highest echelons of Establishment journalism. (source)

In interpretation, because the specific individual horizon of the interpreter is constitutive for that interpretation, the term objectivity refers to the inter-subjective accessibility of the object of interpretation. (source)

And anyone who was not blind was forced equally to admit that this was due primarily to a circumstance under which all of us Germans have to suffer severely: that is, the objectivity of our attitude toward our nationality as well as everything else. (source)

She observes that simplicity and definiteness, that a certain corporeality and externality -- or what in modern critical dialect we would call objectivity -- are notes of antique art; while variety and shading of colour, and a habit of self-reflection developed by Christianity (source)

Across the country, and around the state and in the city, people seem very, very pleased with the level of coverage they are getting, the immediacy of the new, the objectivity, which is amazing when you think about it, given the fact that the reporters are embedded with the troops. (source)

"Perhaps this is so because many liberal activists in America have lost faith in the idea of objectivity, which means they have lost faith in the reality of objective truth, the finding of which -- the finding of truth -- has been the goal, the central focus of the American legal system since its creation." (source)

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Moreover, in a history tinted by the human sensitivity of a leader so intimately linked to an entire nation, would it not be an injustice to restrict oneself to so-called objectivity which in the final analysis is nothing but a recourse to cliches reflecting the jaded values of contemporary commercial journalism, a profession largely guilty for the current international distress? (source)

Sentence Information

The average Flesch reading-ease score of the 43 example sentences provided below is 43.0, which suggests that "objectivity" is a difficult word that tends to be used by individuals of higher education, and is likely found in more advanced literature or in academia.

(noun) judgment based on observable phenomena and uninfluenced by emotions or personal prejudices

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